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Introduction
Published in Emmanuel Tsekleves, John Keady, Design for People Living with Dementia, 2021
Emmanuel Tsekleves, John Keady
Design research has now broadened its skill base and its application. Service design (Meroni and Sangiorgi, 2011) has introduced a new opportunity to address the improved delivery of products and service both within and outside the healthcare system (Bate and Robert, 2006; Lee, 2011). Behavioural design – grounded in psychology and behaviour change theory – has enabled designer to ‘design out’ barriers found across objects, services, spaces, environments (Niedderer et al., 2014) and to influence and/or shape human behaviour (Michie et al., 2011). The ‘Design in Policy’ field is introducing new approaches to developing policy and aiding innovation in organisational, local, regional and national governance (Bason, 2014).
Future Directions of Health Promotion: Role of the Physician
Published in James M. Rippe, Lifestyle Medicine, 2019
One challenge to health promotion in any setting is that the ability to achieve health behavior improvement is dependent on an individual’s willingness to implement change in his or her everyday life. Behavioral design may help people find useful tools and tactics for making healthy lifestyle changes. It also helps determine how able and ready a person is to make a change and what triggers are most likely to instigate that change. If patients are resistant to change, physicians can enlist the expertise of others. Look to what the community can offer. There may be diet- and exercise-tracking apps, free nutritional and wellness counseling, cooking classes, sports clubs, and even community or church groups that could help patients make positive lifestyle changes once they leave the physician’s office.
Behaviours
Published in Emmanuel Tsekleves, Rachel Cooper, Design for Health, 2017
Claire Craig, Paul Chamberlain
In the examples we provide this understanding has led to better design of products, the application of design thinking as a way of claiming back and gaining control or the manifestation of products through a shared process of making in open design. This certainly sits well with the original conceptualisation of behavioural design as expounded by Don Norman (1988) with respect to product design.
Measuring exposure to bullying and harassment in health professional students in a clinical workplace environment: Evaluating the psychometric properties of the clinical workplace learning NAQ-R scale
Published in Medical Teacher, 2020
Kelby Smith-Han, Emma Collins, Mustafa Asil, Althea Gamble Blakey, Lynley Anderson, Elizabeth Berryman, Tim J. Wilkinson
To develop the instrument, we undertook the following processes. The original concept underpinning the NAQ-R (bullying and harassment of employees in a workplace) was modified in order to fit our context (bullying and harassment of students learning in a CWE). Items used in the original NAQ-R were then edited to align with our new context. Finally, we added two new factors of sexual and ethnic harassment. Both processes were conducted while maintaining the original instrument’s behavioural design.